Pages

Friday, 9 August 2013

A-camping we will go....

Just three weeks to go before the end of the school holidays in the Czech Republic so high time to look at the last section of the "Where shall we spend our holidays?" window.

We've been down on the farm, donkeyriding on the beach and now it's time to go camping.

This was the part of the window that needed the most input in terms of things to be made from scratch so this will be a picture heavy post.

I had very little in my collection relating to camping but I thought I could probably at the very least make a tent, using a similar technique to that needed for the sun umbrella on the beach. I bought a conical sieve and started the dipping-material-in-a-glue-and-water-mixture process again.

While that was drying it struck me that the strawberry container holding my lunch had a shape very like our first tent, some forty years ago.

So I found some green material and started gluing that as well......

A polystyrene wall tile also got the green treatment, turning it into a smooth meadow - I wonder why we never ended up pitching our tent on something as easy as that. I seem to remember coping with potholes, slopes, mud, or rock hard ground. I then had a think about what else one might find on a campsite - a gas cooker perhaps, a barbeque, evidence of some outdoor activities, some means of lighting the essential bedtime reading...... A rummage in the well-stocked supply drawers of Small Worlds produced the following assortment:

Should I perhaps at this point introduce an element of competition and ask you to guess a) what purpose these things have in real life and b) what I am intending to turn them into? Well, you can do it informally - there are sadly no prizes for the correct answers anyway! And I don't know what all of them are either.

I do know about the party popper though. I have been saving them for many years - as I mentioned part way through one of the early blog posts - in the expectation that one day I must be able to think of a use for them. And on this occasion the use was obvious - a camping gas bottle.

And there too is the first transformation for the Czech curtain runner. These are brilliant and can be turned to many purposes, though unlike some of the English versions they don't make very good taps.

The gas bottle required a stove so step forward the old-fashioned suppositories container (I see they now come individually wrapped in neat little hygenic foil wrappers. Not forty years ago fortunately.) Two thirds of this three-part box had already served as a radiator and a cooker hob in a mini-bedsit, made by Butterfly when she was twelve for a school project. Now the left-over part came into its own.

Glued into place with some spare plastic legs, giant press studs, fridge doors (miniature ones of course) and two more of the curtain runner bits, it made a not unconvincing camping cooker.

(Unfortunately I have to confess that the extreme heat of the past weeks beating down on the display window has meant that the glue has softened and the legs have inexorably kilted to one side, resulting in the saucepans on top slithering towards the ground every day despite my best attempts to reglue).

Whilst working on this it struck me that the beach scene had yielded some excellent fish (as one would expect from somewhere on the British coast). The little plastic things that had been holding the backs of the beach hut photo frames in place looked remarkably fish-like. A swift chopping of the round tails, a dab of silver pen, and there they were, all ready to go into the bucket.

Fish in a bucket require a fishing rod to get them there. One of the cellos (or maybe it's a double bass) in my collection of musical instruments had a bow that was completely out of scale so I added a press stud reel and glued the strings of the bow together to make a long fishing line. I gazed at a picture of one on-line for a while but I suspect my version would not be very good for catching fishes.

I decided I didn't want to sacrifice the rather nice lanterns which can be seen in a photo above (the one with the hairpins in) so I had to cobble together a gaslight - two little plastic stoppers glued middle to middle, stuck to a wooden teapot minus its spout and handle solved that one, and it's perched on a pizza separator functioning as an extra camping table.

And that was more or less it. So I will end with a few photos of the finished scene. Sadly, once again it isn't really possible to bring you a photo of the whole window display; I still haven't managed to work out how to cope with the reflections both of myself and the building opposite Small Worlds. And looking through the glass is blurry anyway.

I hope you have enjoyed joining me on my summer holidays in Small Worlds - I have thoroughly enjoyed creating the scenes. If the truth be told, this is my favourite aspect of working with tiny things - creating a scene out of the most unlikely objects (and then making visitors to Small Worlds guess what things were in "real life"). One man scored 100% in the guessing game round the museum last week and then requested his prize. I had to rapidly look up the Czech for "I'm afraid it's just the honour of out-guessing everyone else!"

For those who enjoy statistics, I am very happy to report that we have had more than 250 adults and about the same number of children through the door since we opened on 15th June - less than two months ago. The town museum, where one of my houses is also on display with the intention of pointing people in my direction, can only report a total of 60 adults and about 10 children in the past three months. I have hastily put up some posters to encourage people to head there if they have enjoyed Small Worlds.

I am gearing up towards my return to the UK at the beginning of September but before that happens I look forward to seeing you here in the not too distant future with more news of what is happening in Small Worlds - thank you for following the continuing journey.

Well, I intelligently left it on the screen so was able to read and examine it in detail once I got home... fantastic! And I love that Adam is there with his binoculars. I'm not sure why the father feels the need to wear a shirt and tie... Wish I could see the whole layout.

Oh, I did enjoy that tour of the campsite, especially all the amazingly diverse elements that went into the making of it. In particular thank you for the use of the pizza separator as table - I've always looked at them and thought 'tiny tables' but have never done anything with the idea. It's my firm belief that ideas are easy - it's doing something with them that's the clever stuff. Oh and many congratulations on the visitor figures!

Oh how splendid, ingenious and successful! The green tent looks immensely inviting. How well-equipped everyone is for a perfect holiday.

It wouldn't be a proper comment from me without a helpful suggestion, this time about the lack of a prize for the visitors who guess the objects. Why not have a Wall of Fame? Fashion a certificate (possibly dolls' house-sized) proclaiming the achievement in Czech and English - you could probably find a fancy seal or coat-of-arms online - or you could use Laura's artwork. oooh ooh ooh! you could make a mouse coat-of-arms!!!!! With pig couchant! Anyhoo - run some of those off, and award them to successful peeps, take a picture of each person and then put the photo on the Wall (Board?) of Fame..A x

This is all just ingenious! I discovered you after you left a lovely comment on my altered book at Our Creative Corner. I have always loved small worlds, creating all kinds when I was a little girl and then watching my children do the same! I love your camping themed post. Thank you for sharing everything, including the ideas that didn't quite work like the glue on the legs! Julie Ann xx

About Me

I appear as Cestina on a number of websites - the Chalet School Bulletin Board which is a site devoted to the writings of Elinor M Brent-Dyer, a gardeners' website called GrowsonYou, the Almacks list on Yahoo which covers the work of Georgette Heyer, the Amazon and Guardian discussion forums and the Rummikub website. My avatar is either a Newfoundland dog in memory of our wonderful Drummer or a basket of wild mushrooms which reveals another passion.
But my first and abiding love is all things miniature and in this blog I would like to take you on a journey through miniature worlds and into the museum I have always dreamed of creating.